EGGS
A bald eagle egg is slightly smaller than a domestic goose egg. The chick will
measure 4 to 5 inches at hatching and weigh only a matter of ounces.

Bald eagles incubate their eggs for about 35
days. They begin incubation as soon as the first egg is laid. The second egg
usually appears within 36 to 72 hours after the first. Occasionally a clutch of
3 eggs will be produced.

CHICKS
Eagle chicks are fed a steady diet of fish, occasionally supplemented by water
fowl (ducks, geese) or water birds (gulls, cormorants). About 85% of a chick's
diet will typically consist of fish such as carp, white sucker, shad, bullhead
and sunfish. The adults capture and tear the fish into small strips, offering
them to the chicks. The chicks snatch the food from the adult's beak and swallow
it whole. An eagle chick will eat as much as it can at a single feeding, storing
food in its crop. The crop, an organ located near the base of the bird's neck,
will enlarge as it fills, resembling a golf ball.

HUNTING
& FEEDING
The male does most of the hunting and scavenging during the early weeks of the
chick's life. The female does the majority of the feeding and brooding.

The male will often eat the head of the fish
he catches and then bring the remainder to the nest. The male will brood and
feed the chick when the female is off the nest. She will leave to stretch,
defecate, bathe, preen and hunt on her own.

THE ADULTS
The male eagle is smaller than the female. He weighs about 10 lbs. and the
female tips the scales at about 14 lbs. Being smaller, he is slightly quicker
and more agile, giving him an advantage in catching prey. She, being larger, is
better able to incubate the eggs and brood the young chicks, using her body to
shelter her offspring from cold, soaking rains or hot sun. The male's wingspan
is a little more than 6 feet from wing tip to wing tip, the female's is between
6.5 and 7 feet.

CHICK'S
GROWTH
The chicks will be nearly full grown at 9 weeks of age. They will add some
weight as they develop their flight muscles after they leave the nest. Their
wingspan will be as large or slightly larger than the adults at this time.

FLEDGLING FACTSOnce most of their wing and tail feathers are
developed, the eaglets can finally leave the nest. First flights usually occur
at 9 or 10 weeks of age and are preceded by vigorous exercising and flapping.
When a male and female are in the same nest, the male may fledge first. The
chick will typically lift off of the nest by facing into the prevailing winds
and flapping. Sometimes the adults will force the eaglets to fly.

Often the first flight will be to the nearest
branch above the nest. When chicks leave the nest they usually glide to a nearby
tree or stump, returning to the nest tree frequently and continuing to be fed by
the adults. At first the eaglets have difficulty landing on tree limbs.
However, if they land on the ground, they need open space to flap their wings to
become airborne.

While eaglets improve their landing and flying skills, they depend on their
parents for food. The adults will bring food to where the eaglets are perched.
Eaglets will stay close to the nest and nest tree during the first few weeks
after fledging.

Within one month after fledging, eaglets will soar and drift over the river.

CHICKS
LEAVING THE NEST
The eaglets are poor hunters and may scavenge on dead prey. As the chicks
develop their flight skills they harass the adults and try to take fish from
them. This behavior helps eaglets learn to forage and be independent and will
last into September. At 17 to 23 weeks of age, the bond between the adults and
their young fades and the adults no longer tolerate harassment from their
offspring. This is time when the young eagles leave the territory, following the
prevailing winds to more northerly shorelines and water bodies in search of good
feeding grounds.

EAGLES
& MIGRATION
Eagles don't migrate in the sense that robins and bluebirds do. Eagles only
travel as far as they have to in order to find food. This is particularly true
of adult eagles with established territories. Adults will stay on their
territory (roughly 1 - 6 square miles) year round as long as there is open water
nearby where they can hunt. Should a severe winter limit the food supply, eagles
will move as far south as necessary to find open water and suitable feeding
grounds.

YOUTH TO
ADULT
The young eagle will spend the next 4 years of its life wandering across eastern
North America looking for summering and wintering areas where food is
accessible. The mortality rate for eagles during their first year of life is
greater than 50%, but once they have learned to hunt and forage successfully
their chances of reaching adulthood are good. When it begins to mature at age 4,
an eagles seeks a mate and establishes a territory. The territory is usually
located within 250 miles of the nest where the eagle was hatched. There, the new pair of eagles will construct their own
nest but often don't produce eggs or young during their first year as a pair.
They'll return in following years to raise young of their own.

DISTANCE
TRAVELED
Immature eagles wander great distances in search of food. Birds banded in
Massachusetts have been sighted as far away as West Virginia and southern
Canada. Eagles sighted in Massachusetts have come from as far away as Maine, New
York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, New Hampshire and Michigan.